High Court judge who criticised cops over Delhi violence transferred
The transfer notification does not give any time-frame for when he should join the Punjab and Haryana High Court. Such transfer orders usually give 14 days' time to join the new court
The third highest judge of the Delhi High Court Justice S Muralidhar, who on February 26 grilled the centre, the state government and the Delhi Police over the violence in the national capital, has been transferred to the Punjab and Haryana High Court.
The central government issued the transfer notification around 11pm yesterday night, about two weeks after it was recommended by the Supreme Court collegium on February 12, NDTV reports.
"In exercise of the power conferred by clause (1) of Article 222 of the Constitution of India, the President, after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, is pleased to transfer Shri Justice S Muralidhar, Judge of the Delhi High Court, as a Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court and to direct him to assume charge of his office in the Punjab and Haryana High Court," the government notification read.
The transfer notification does not give any time-frame for when he should join the Punjab and Haryana High Court. Such transfer orders usually give 14 days' time to join the new court.
The Delhi High Court Bar Association had last week condemned the transfer and demanded the Supreme Court collegium to recall the move.
Earlier on Wednesday, Justice Muralidhar had said, "We cannot let another 1984-like event happen in this country" and asked the government - at the centre and in Delhi - to work together to combat unrelenting violence that hit parts of the national capital for a fourth consecutive day.
The comment came in a tense hearing during which videos of hate speeches by four BJP leaders - Kapil Mishra, Anurag Thakur, Abhay Verma and Parvesh Verma - were played. The hearing was on a petition seeking First Information Reports (FIRs) against those who incited and participated in the violence in northeast Delhi.
The judge asked why there shouldn't be FIRs against the four BJP leaders. He told the Delhi Police chief to "seriously consider the consequences" of not registering the FIR.
When the centre, represented by Solicitor General Tushar Mehta argued that FIRs would be registered at an "appropriate time", Justice Muralidhar said: "What's the appropriate time, Mr Mehta? The city is burning".
The judge had asked the police to appear on Thursday with a status report. The case is now listed before the Chief Justice of Delhi High Court, Justice Dhirubhai Naranbhai Patel.
The Delhi violence left 28 people dead and over 200 injured.